Showing posts with label Weekly Reflection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weekly Reflection. Show all posts

Tuesday, 8 May 2018

Weekly Reflection - 08/05/18


I have not long returned from my trip to Berlin to visit the Pictoplasma Festival 2018!

It has been an amazing week experiencing the colourful and gorgeous city of Berlin, going around the character walk and speaking to much admired artists. Because I have seen and done so much in the space of a week I have decided to summarise each day in to paragraphs to make it easier.

01/05/18 - Day One

On day one we all met up at the airport to get ready to fly out, because the flight was didn't arrive until after 10pm in Berlin there wasn't too much of a rush (until we were paying for our meals and running for our plane). 



When we arrived in Berlin, we went straight to the coach which took us to our hostel. This was just a settling-in night in comparison to what was to come so whilst uneventful in the way of art and illustration, there was plenty of excitement amongst the class and we had a sit-in night with a few drinks.

 


02/05/18 - Day Two

The second day was very informative and gave us all the chance to get-to-know the city, getting to know how the trains work, and being given free reign to wander without restrictions. I had fun being a tourist and getting to see all the attractions. 


After a little look around the city, we all met up to go to Urban Spree which exhibited artwork from contributing artists and had stalls where merch such as clothing and artist prints were up for sale. 

 

During the evening we attended the Pictoplasma Opening Party that had an array of different things to see, one of the highlights being the staredown room, a reference to the recent call for entries the Character Staredown. 


After a long and expensive day we made our way back to the hostel to prep for the following day.

03/05/18 - Day Three


On the third day myself and several others in my class were determined to go visit a local store known as The Dudes where everyone managed to get a hold on some high quality and gorgeously designed tees.

 

After our adventure to the Dudes Factory we decided to have a little chill time and doodle in a park whilst the sun was out.

 


04/05/18 - Day Four

On the fourth day myself and my class were on a mission to conclude this trip by going around the character walk in a day.

One of the first exhibitions we had a look at was Moomins. The Moomins are a family of white and roundish trolls with large snouts created by the illustrator, writer, and artist Tove Jansson (1914-2001). Keeping the heritage and the original Moomin artwork alive, one of the latest projects has been the animation feature film ‘Moomins on the Riviera,’ created by Xavier Picard in 2014 and based on the comic strips by Tove and her younger brother Lars. This exhibition showcases original pencil drawings and scenes from the experimental animated family comedy.


Next on our walk was Lunartik otherwise known as Matt Jones, a multi-media artist renown for his collectible series of ‘Lunartik in a Cup of Tea.’ Pop along for an eye-full of designer vinyl art toys and a chance to meet Matt himself, the man behind the cup! I was especially drawn to his Beatles figurines but could not coax myself in to buying one. 


And one of my favourite exhibitions was set just as you enter a graveyard on Verwalterhaus. Which displayed work from several artists such as Victor Castillo, a Chilean artist presents a series of new paintings created especially for the festival. They explore the laws of the jungle and the age-old story of ‘man eats man.’ Inspired by vintage animation, Castillo’s paintings are like theatrical sketches of tragicomic scenarios. With cartoon-like figures foregrounded against classical landscapes, Castillo’s baroque lighting completes the dramatic effect of exposing lost innocence.

Castillo has definitely been one of my far favourites out of the few we seen. His work inspired me on a whole other level and the setting of the exhibition was too perfect.


Within the same exhibit was the work of Moki, an artist and illustrator who blurs the lines between the mental and the physical, allowing for the creation of a series of unique spaces of sanctuary, protection and solace. A sophisticated painterly skill is employed to give a staggering degree of reality to her paintings, no matter how fantastical the content may be. However, more recently Moki has been veering away from unreality, instead drawing inspiration from the seemingly endless sources of concern for the well being of many of planet earth’s creatures, including much of humanity. In her new comic novel, ‘Swamp Land,’ the artist Moki tries to picture this complexity, weaving stories into one other, both mysterious and visionary. This exhibition further explores the cosmos of ‘Swamp Land.’



Next on our travels was another amazing exhibition at Neurotitan which displayed the work two of my favourite artists Kévin Gemin and James Curran as well as another two talented illustrators/animators Jim Stoten and Cachetejack. 

Although he goes by Kévin, he is very popularly known as Kéké. He is a 2D animator and illustrator and a big fan of animals, so much so that they inspre him to create stories and short animated GIFs to share happiness and fun. He animates with the application known as Flipnote Studio on a Nintendo handheld gaming system (such as 3DS and DSi) which has enabled him to teach himself how to animate and experiment with the pixel effects.

                                           Image result for kevin gemin pictoplasma

As a long time, loving fan of Kéké's I was very inspired to make little doodles along the way on our character walk so I made a simple little doodle page of all his characters that represent him. I was going to give it to him in person but unfortunately did not go to his conference as I couldn't afford the tickets. I decided to leave them at his exhibit for him but due to the restrictions on taking pictures in the exhibition I don't expect it to go very far.


My second favourite illustrator and animator is James Curran who made work towards his Gifathons. He spends 30 days in a different city making a short looping animation each day based on his experiences during his stay, from strip clubs, to tacos and toilets. For this first Gifathon exhibition, all 90 animations made in New York, Los Angeles, and Tokyo will be shown together along with a brand new mini-Gifathon on seven days spent in Berlin, created especially for Pictoplasma.

                           Image result for james curran pictoplasma neurotitan

In the same building was Jim Stoten, an artist and illustrator living in Hastings. He produces work for a long list of clients and pushes his creative boundaries in personal projects, exploring painting, animation, collage, and music.

                                          Image result for Jim stoten pictoplasma

And finally, to conclude our character walk was the work of Cachetejack, a Spanish illustrator duo presents a series of new gouache works on paper and silkscreen prints. Their illustration universe is full of colors, energy, humour and irony. The hand drawn work of Cachetejack takes a fresh and unique style working in a variety of mediums, including—but not limited to—books, magazines, newspapers, clothing, drawing, painting, walls and illustration. Cachetejack combines reality with a quirky point of view to create situations and environments closer to the viewer.

                                         Image result for cachetejack pictoplasma

After a long and tiresome day of walking around the city of Berlin, our class went for a final dinner together before a couple drinks and wind down.

05/05/18 - Day Five (The Last Day)

The last day was a very mellow and relaxed day, we were up early for breakfast and to clean out our rooms. We made an early trip to Babylon to pick up some very pretty merch and were even given free posters.

                              Image result for babylon pictoplasma

After our return from Babylon, all that was left was to wait around on our coach to the airport and hop on our flight. I found this to be the worst part of the trip as there was a lot of waiting to get out of a place I didn't wanted to leave. I absolutely love Berlin, it's been an amazing experience meeting all the amazing like-minded creatives visiting the festival from abroad and exhibiting. I am also incredibly lucky to have been surrounded by the amazing people residing in my class who were excellent company to have on my travels. I will definitely be back next year and look forward to seeing what's in store.


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Friday, 10 November 2017

Alternative Techniques - Print-Pressing Process

Fortunately I already had a bit of experience on from the previous year on print-pressing so could organise myself accordingly to how I remember. I started by making a 20x20cm canvas to work on, and traced over some bird skulls on Adobe Photoshop using my Wacom tablet.


I had originally planned on doing just the one skull but later found that it looked quite barren and empty, so filled it up with a couple more skulls before putting it in to Illustrator.


Using the ellipse tool I placed a circle around the skulls and turned the fill off. I thought this would bring the piece together as a whole when printing on paper, rather than having three skulls looking quite barren on the page.
When actually doing the press-printing we worked in two separate groups before and after lunch time. Myself being in the slot before lunch meant myself and a couple others were the first to run in to some of the blunders that unfolded. For a select few people who's designs had very fine lines, the ink would struggle to pick up, meaning we would be tightening and loosening the roller a bit. Unfortunately when we tightened it enough for the ink to pick up this, it would be too tight and some times crack or snap the plate. This happened a couple of times on my plate and I had to glue some pieces back together and get some sandpaper on the job.


Once we had gotten past all the small technicalities though I found it to be very rewarding and loved the turnout of my prints.


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Thursday, 30 March 2017

Digital Piece Progress




Here is progress towards my digital work for my print template. The wallpaper is definitely subject to change and I still need to taper lines around the dressing unit but here is a quick brush up of where I am at.
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Tuesday, 28 March 2017

Wednesday, 22 March 2017

Weekly Reflection - Reference Pictures

Today I went to take reference pictures of the skull for the skeleton and my model and dresser. I am happy with outcome and intend to do photobashing with my tutor tomorrow.

I am currently ahead of schedule and and happy with the progress made today.




As you can see in this one I was going to originally take the picture in front of the green screen but if you look closely you can just see some of the green reflecting off of the white of the jaw. This would make more work for me that what it was worth so I later chose to just use a plain white background.


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Monday, 20 March 2017

Wednesday, 15 March 2017

Weekly Reflection - Sketchbook Work (1)

This week has been very productive. I have managed to complete my moodboard and doodle some ideas.

My concept is for the woman looking in to the mirror sees a gruesome and rotted version of herself, thus portraying the vanity of looking at herself and the hallucination of what isn't really there. This is just a thumbnail but I have considered ideas such as the woman and the rotted figure swapped places, so that its the lady inside the mirror and the her rotted self looking in to it, this would also affect how vain she is to only see beauty where as she is actually rotting and decaying.




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Saturday, 4 March 2017

Weekly Reflection

This week I completed a full-body figure of Sorrel on illustrator. There are a few mistakes around the gun and hair but I will be moving on to fix those shortly. I decided to stick with concept two because I really liked the space bun hair, it was very fitting for an alien who resides in space. One thing I especially would like to change is the boots, I like the detail I have put in to this piece however, I feel like they take away the space vibes that surround the character and that's something I would like to keep consistent.

After some feedback I decided to keep the vegetation quite minimal in her hair because I didn't want it to look overly cluttered. I still have to get around to making a colour palette and finishing the other views on the turnaround before I start to colour.

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